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All at sea
continued
from previous page 10 the economy to others
Lead indicators
The extent to which the
combined
effects of the housing market crash and the resultant credit crunch
will lead to a recession is currently hotly debated by analysts,
though it clearly has the potential to be very serious indeed. Hard
data in the coming months should prove conclusive one way or the
other as, in truth, there are few genuine ‘lead indicators’ of a
slump that can tell us definitively that one is about to happen, or
how deep it will be. For example, production tends to fall most
noticeably once the slump is already underway and unemployment is
another lagging indicator, only rising when companies have started
cutting back on staffing levels in response to difficult trading
conditions.
Falling stock markets are
better lead
indicators of a recession; this is because at the level of individual
companies it is their interim and preliminary company results along
with quarterly trading statements that typically give advance clues
as to what is happening on the ground, and stock markets are usually
quick to react, as they have been this time. Nearly all major stock
markets have at some point fallen 20 per cent or more from their
peaks since the credit crunch started, technically entering ‘bear
market’ territory. The problem with stock markets, however, is that
they can fall in the short-term for all sorts of other reasons too
and also have a tendency to over-react to events. When UK shares lost
about 50 per cent of their value in the 2000-3 bear market (and US
shares almost as much) this reflected little that was happening in
the real world of the underlying capitalist economy of production and
trade.
Some economists and analysts
have
argued that the best indicator of an impending recession is what is
called an ‘inverted yield curve’ on the money markets. This means
a situation whereby short-term interest rates are above long-term
rates (the inverse of the usual relationship) and in these
circumstances banks have little incentive to lend long-term to
industry when selective short-term lending is both safer and more
profitable. In practice, an inverted yield curve is indeed almost
always a precursor of recessions. Unfortunately, like falling stock
markets, inverted yield curves can happen at other times too (the US
had a significantly inverted yield curve in 2000 and had a curve that
flattened and threatened to invert in 1998, yet there was no
recession on either occasion). This time around, the US yield curve
inverted in 2006-7 and has since switched to being positive; the UK
yield curve inverted in the wake of the credit crunch starting last
summer, and has recently started to flatten out again.
Mine’s A Baltic Dry
Arguably the best lead
indicator of a
recession exists as a measurement of what is happening in the ‘real’
economy of production and trade in capitalism rather than its
financial superstructure. This is a curious and little known gauge of
economic activity called the Baltic Dry Index. It covers dry bulk
shipping rates and is managed by the Baltic Exchange in the City of
London.
Each day the Baltic Exchange
establishes average prices for shipping various cargoes around the
world, whether it be 100,000 tones of iron ore from Brazil to the UK
or 100,000 tons of soybeans from the US to India. Essentially, the
index is a barometer of activity amongst shipbrokers involved in
shipping those raw materials that are typically the precursors to
production around the world, and it measures the demand for shipping
capacity versus the supply of bulk carriers. It is a useful index
because dry bulk mainly consists of commodities that act as raw
material inputs into the production of other goods such as
electricity, steel and food. Also, demand for these is variable and
elastic whereas the supply of dry bulk shipping is inelastic,
changing little in the short-term because of the length of time
needed to build new tankers. This means changes in the index tend to
principally reflect changes in demand. Fluctuations in the index have
historically proved to be amongst the best lead indicators of
economic activity in the market economy there is.
This has been demonstrated
over the
last few years, when the Baltic Dry Index surged on the back of the
booming global economy and the demand for industrial and agricultural
commodities led by China, India, Brazil and other emerging markets.
Interestingly, despite a continuation of much of this activity, the
index has in more recent times faltered. >From the beginning of
2005 until the start of 2008 the index more than doubled, but after
some volatile movement has since fallen from a peak of nearly 11,800
reached in May to around 7,000 at the time of writing, a fall of
around 40 per cent. If this fall continues into the autumn and
beyond, then a widespread, serious recession is more than likely as
it will be reflective of a massive decline in the demand for raw
materials required for the world economy.
Quite how severe the
economic downturn
proves to be is no small matter of interest as it will affect the
lives of hundreds if millions across the globe, leading to falling
production, falling property prices, rising unemployment and acute
financial distress for many. And this is far more significant than
the distress that is being caused for a Prime Minster in Britain who
swore that this would never happen and who thought he could hold back
the tide of capitalism’s business cycle through his financial
management skills – a man who has been left looking ever more like
King Canute instead, staring out to sea with the waves already
lapping well above his ankles.
DAP
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